A genre analysis of 284 essay examination prompts reveals specific discoursal characteristics which function to communicate what type of response will be considered legitimate. The main pedagogical implication is that for test takers to the able to decode prompts, they must draw upon the same functional/linguistic knowledge of genre that the test constructor did. This suggests that academic writing teachers should familiarize their students with the discoursal characteristics of examination prompts.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
Johns, A.M.1988. Using schema-theoretical principles to teach the summary. Presentation at the 22nd annual TESOL Convention. Chicago .
2.
Johns, C.M. (1976). Examination questions. Students handout, University of Aston, Birmingham.
3.
Hamp-Lyons, L.1986. Assessing Second Language Writing in Academic Settings. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. University of Edinburgh .
4.
Horowitz, D. (1986a). Essay examination prompts and the teaching of academic writing. English for Specific Purposes Journal5, 107-120.
5.
Horowitz, D. (1986b). What professors actually require: Academic tasks for the ESL classroom. TESOL Quarterly20 (3), 445-462.
6.
Horowitz, D. (1986c). Process, not product: Less than meets the eye (in The Forum)TESOL Quarterly, 20, 141-144.
7.
Mallows, D. (1980). Instructional verbs used in examination papers set in 1979 for students taking a higher national diploma in mechanical engineering at Oxford Polytechnic. Mimeo.
8.
Miller, C.R.( 1984). Genre as social action. Quarterly Journal of Speech70, 151-167.
9.
Pollitt, A., Hutchinson, C., Entwistle N. & DeLuca, C. (1985). What makes exam questions difficult?Edinburgh, Scottish Academic Press.
10.
Ruth, L. & Murphy, S. (1984). Designing topics for writing assessment: Problems of meaning. College Composition and Communication35(4), 410-421
11.
Shih, M. (1986). Content-based approaches to teaching academic writing. TESOL Quarterly20, 617-648.
12.
Swales, J. (1982). Examining examination papers. English Language Research Journal3, 9-25.
13.
Swales, J. (1985). Episodes in ESP. Oxford: Pergamon.
14.
Swales, J. (1988). A genre-based approach to ESL materials. Unpublished manuscript.
15.
Swales, J. and Horowitz, D. (1988). Genre-based approaches to ESL and ESP materials. Handout from a presentation at the 22nd Annual TESOL Convention, Chicago.